JWST UNCOVER: Extremely red and compact object atzphot7.6 triply imaged by Abell 2744
Abstract
Recent JWST/NIRCam imaging taken for the ultra-deep UNCOVER program reveals a very red dropout object at zphot7.6, triply imaged by the galaxy cluster Abell 2744 (zd=0.308). All three images are very compact, i.e. unresolved, with a de-lensed size upper-limit of re35 pc. The images have apparent magnitudes of mF444W25-26 AB, and the magnification-corrected absolute UV magnitude of the source is MUV,1450=-16.810.09. From the sum of observed fluxes and from a spectral energy distribution (SED) analysis, we obtain estimates of the bolometric luminosities of the source of Lbol1043 ergs and Lbol1044-1046 ergs, respectively. Based on its compact, point-like appearance, its position in color-color space and the SED analysis, we tentatively conclude that this object is a UV-faint dust-obscured quasar-like object, i.e. an active galactic nucleus (AGN) at high redshift. We also discuss other alternative origins for the object's emission features, including a massive star cluster, Population III, supermassive, or dark stars, or a direct-collapse black hole. Although populations of red galaxies at similar photometric redshifts have been detected with JWST, this object is unique in that its high-redshift nature is corroborated geometrically by lensing, that it is unresolved despite being magnified -- and thus intrinsically even more compact -- and that it occupies notably distinct regions in both size-luminosity and color-color space. Planned UNCOVER JWST/NIRSpec observations, scheduled in Cycle 1, will enable a more detailed analysis of this object.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.